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Security Token Startup Polymath Locks up 75 Million Tokens

Despite chilly market conditions, one startup is locking up approximately $9 million worth of its tokens for five years.
Polymath, a company best known for advancing the idea of security tokens
(those designed explicitly to fit under current securities laws),
revealed to CoinDesk that it is locking up 75 million of its POLY
tokens. That’s 7.5 percent of the total supply, and a quarter of the
current circulating supply.

“A lot of projects have shut down or done major layoffs lately due to
lack of funds,” Polymath cofounder Chris Housser told CoinDesk in an
email. “What we are demonstrating is that our treasury is healthy and we
don’t have a need for these tokens at this time.”

Treasury management has been a hot topic in the blockchain industry as asset prices have dropped.

“Thankfully we decided early to diversify a lot of ETH/BTC holdings,”
Housser told us. Polymath raised $58.7 million using a simple agreement
for future tokens in January 2018, according to a filing with the SEC.

According to Housser, 74 percent of the locked-up tokens (57 million)
will come from those designated for the company and 26 percent (18
million) will come from those designated for the founders. Per the terms
of POLY’s smart contract, tokens are released for use periodically
through 2022, but the team is redirecting part of these to a new smart
contract that will hold them until January 1, 2024.

Users spend POLY tokens on the Polymath platform during the process of
launching new security tokens. The company says 75 tokens have been
created using the platform so far.

Though many things could be tokenized in the future, Housser says the
strongest immediate interest appears to be in real estate. He wrote:

“People really like the idea of fractionalized ownership and the
ability to own a piece of something that would be much more difficult to
do in the traditional world. With more real-estate-based financial
products on the blockchain, there will be greater ability to bundle
these products to go long on certain areas and short on others.”

Limiting token releases or treasury payouts has been viewed positively
by the industry. For example, Blockstack has taken a similar path in
locking up tokens – though it took a milestone, rather than time-based,
approach. The Beijing-based team building the Nebulas blockchain
announced last August that it locked up founders tokens for a decade,
though it subsequently laid off 60 percent of its staff.

Housser wrote of Polymath:

“We as a company and founders are committed to the project long-term.”